1. The small farms that the affirmative creates are a mass institutionalization of Patriarchy and male dominance.
Elisabeth Prugl associate professor of International Relations at Florida International University. June 2, 01 “Europeanizing Patriarchy: The EU’s Common Agricultural Policy. <http://aei.pitt.edu/2160/> p. 4-5

2. Agricultural planning is culturally biased and overlooks women hampering any chance of independence and further entrenching patriarchy.
Ann Whitehead and Helen Bloom. Professor of anthropology at the University of Sussex and an international consultant who specializes in work/life and career development issue respectively. 92. Gender and Development: a Practical Guide. Edited by Lise Ostergaard and published by Routledge. p. 43

3. Propping up patriarchy leads to nuclear war.
Betty A Reardon, Editor for Global Conflict and Peace Education. “Feminist Visions of Global Security”, Women and Peace pg. 31
Most men in our patriarchal culture are still acting out old patterns that are radically inappropriate for the nuclear age. To provide dominance and control, to distance one’s character from that of women, to survive the toughest violent initiation, to shed the blood of the hero, to collaborate with death in order to hold it at bay- all of these patriarchal pressures on men have traditionally reached resolution in ritual fashion on the battlefield. But there is no longer any battlefield. Does anyone seriously believe that if a nuclear power were losing a crucial, large-scale conventional war it would refrain from using it’s multiple war-head nuclear missiles because of some diplomatic agreement? The military theatre of nuclear exchange today would extend, instantly or eventually, to all living things, all the air, all the soil, all the water If we believe war is a “necessary evil,” that patriarchal assumptions are simply “human nature” then we are locked into a lie, paralyzed. The ultimate result of unchecked terminal patriarchy will be nuclear holocaust.

The causes of recurrent warfare are not biological. Neither are they solely economic. They are also a result of patriarchal ways of thinking, which historically have generated considerable pressure for standing armies to be used. (Spretnak 1983).